Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 02, 1920, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1920.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEB PUBLISHING COMPANY,
NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publlahtr.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PUH
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local aaMlrtaa kmlri. ail l(bu af nabilaallaa at aw ajaaal
BEE TELEPHONES
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
CouaaU BluRt
Tori
tin iwriM; irth .nd r.MM-
il awn i. i ant nuik
0(MTrn OtttoMi 1
IM Plfta Ata, I Wuhinitoa 1111 SV
Sunt Bios, I I'vU Priaea i0 In St. Honor
The Be f$ Piriform
I. Nw Ualea fuHipr f tetloav
Z. Coatfaaaal inaaraveataat af Uka Na
braeke) Higaware, iaalala la paa
raaat of MaJai Tkoraaakfaraa iaeaHag
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
9. A abort, low-rate Waterway fraaa iW
Cora Ball to tka Atlaalia Oaac.
4. Ham Bala Ckartar far Oanaaja, it
City Maaaf ar farai af Gavaraaaaart.
WHY AMERICANS FOUGHT.
The simple statement by Captain "Eddie"
Rickenbackcr as to the motive that actuated the
soldiers of the A. E. F. is most convincing. Ad
vocates of the League of Nations policy of
President Wilson have assiduously sought to
convey the impression that our country went
into the war to pave the way for the adoption
of the covenant without the dotting of an "i" or
the crossing of t "t" and for no other purpose.
Four years ago in Omaha the president said
Americans were willing and ready to fight, just
as soon as they could find out which side was
right and what they were to fight for. While the
war was on he gave several reasons as to why
we went in. On May 12, 1917, he said:
We go in because we believe that the very
principles upon which the American Republic
was founded are now at stake and must be
vindicated. 1
How closely this expression of the presi
dent in the early days of the war squares with
that of Captain Rickenbacker may be not by
comparison, and they fairly indrCate the line of
thought that ran through the minds of all
Americans. The captain says of the soldiers;
They went over to Europe and fought for
their country that is, the United States. I
do not believe that any one of them ever
thought once that he wav fighting to Set up a
League of Nations or to help establish a
United States of the World. I know what
Mr. Wilson and Mr. Cox say they did, but I
do not think that these gentlemen realize
what the fighting men fought for or the spirit
in -which they fought. They are both mis
taken, that is all.
We believe that Captain Rickenbacker has
hit the bullseye as accurately as he ever did
while he was making his remarkable record as
leading American "ace." No thought of the
league as now proposed ever entered the public
mind at the time. The safety pi the United
States was what all were concerned in, the de
feat of Germany being looked upon as neces
sary to this. No one dreamed of a permanent
alliance by which we would bind ourselves per
petually to fix boundaries, to determine internal
as well as external policies, and attend to all
the minutae of European political housekeeping.
Making the world safe ior democracy was
one thing; to perpetuate the determinations of
the Council of Paris i. finite anntrirr Pa is
.
as desirable now as it ever was, is just as much
an American ideal now as at any time, but a
considerable majority xf the people do not be
lieve the only way to peace lies along the route
selected by the democrats. How great this
majority will be- determined in November.
Making the Wheels Go Round
One of the encouraging signs is that wheels
are turning faster just now in America than they
have in a long time. Manufacturers report in
a general way that labor is becomingtmore ef
ficient; the output per man is getting nearer to
a normal basis than has been the experience
since the jazz days started right after the ar
mistice. Likewise, the railroads are able to re
port that cars are moving faster. In 1914 the
average movement of a loaded freight car in
the United States per day was 26 miles. Presi
dent Gray of the Union Pacific reports that for
the month of July, 1920, the average loaded car
movement on the Union Pacific was 83.4 miles,
and for August it was 80.2 miles. This is going
some. It means that one box car is now doing
as muCli, so far as travel is concerned, as three
did before the war. If the processes of loading
and unloading have been similarly accelerated,
the gain is to treble the efficiency of the freight
car. When the item of loading is considered,
and it is remembered that the service of the
same cars was more than doubled during the
war by increasing the minimum load to the
'capacity of the car, an idea may be gained of
what has been accomplished, without regard to
the expansion of business, which is indicated by
th fart that with all the vain in xnred and ton.
rage, the transportation system of the country
is still far behind demands. But the big men of
'the railroads are making the wheels go round.
City or Country Life?
, Reports from the census bureau at Wash
ington emphasize the fact that urban popula
tion in the United States is gaining at the ex
pense of the rural.- It is possible that the ap
parent rate of increase is but the reflection of
a disturbed balance, incident to the general so
cial aberation produced by the war. Young"
men were caught up from the farm and put into
uniform, and have not yet found their way back
to their original pursuits. Also, mechanical in
dustries called for large numbers of workers
and offered such inducements as led many to
abandon the smaller communities and take their
chances in the big towns. These influences are
now losing something of their potency, and
there is some reason to think the turn may be
in the other direction. It is we'll to keep In
mind, when considering this question, that the
census was taken before recovery from the war
unheavaL
in one of the current magazines a writer,
discussing the question, gives it as his opinion
that when labqr on the farms provides the same
return as employment in factories, then a swing
to the fields will-be noted, because, he argues,
the appeal of fresh air, sunlight, and .the open
is irresistible. Perhaps this is true. Other fac
tors of the problem deserve equal examination.
It is not easy for tke man with small capital
to t-ct start in business nowaday; he must
begin on a mirfor scale, is compelled to work
bard, practice thrift and economy, and watch
his step very closely in order to get ahead. Yet
such a man has as good an opening in the
country as he has In town.
For many reasons, all more or less obvious,
farm labor will never be on exactly the same
footing as that of fhe city. Wages, hours, and
other conditions can not be so exactly regu
lated, for success on the' farm depends on ele
ments that do not enter into the factory cal
culation. Nature is whimsical, and her moods
must be met by the husbandman. However, the
farm does offer a sure living, a chance to save,
and through industry and thrift to get ahead.
The road is as clear from the corn field as it
is from the work shop, lies in the same direction,
contains the same bumps, and offers the same
attractions. The call of chanticleer is no harder
to answer than is the alarm clock or the warn
ing whistle, while the drudgery of the farm is
far less monotonous than is that of the modern
"systemizeu "factory. Men may yet come to
realize this and so the balance between city and
country population be restored in time.
Harding- Has a Plan.
If the gentlemen who have complained so
dolorously that Senator Harding has no plan
for entangb'ng the United States in an alliance
with other nations to do things that are extra
constitutional in their nature, and admittedly
hazardous as well, will read his address to the
women who heard him from the front porch at
Marion yesterday, maybe they can get a little
comfort. Senator Harding did not submit a
plan for healing all the ills of a distressed and
weary world, but he did submit some views as
to what ought to be done in America.
Right off the reel he pledged himself to the
enforcement of prohibition. That will, very
likely, satisfy Wayne B. Wheeler, who has ob
jected that the senator's stand was not satisfac
tory to him. However, that does not so much
matter. What is more to the point, the candi
date of the republican party discussed lucidly
another and even more important feature of our
national life, the care and protection of women.
Contenting himself with the statement that he
believed the majority of women are opposed to
the League of Nations as outlined in the Ver
sailles treaty, he took up for consideration
woman's new relation to the national life. Depre
cating too much interference by federal welfare
boards with the social life of the nation, he
pointed out that industrial abuses must be cor
rected. To secure this he believes a new de
partment should be added to the cabinet, under
which may be grouped the activities of various
boards, commissions and bureaus now dealing
with correlated subjects but independently of
each other. To this department will be relegated
such questions as the public health, child labor,
woman's jemployment, and all the details in
.which the , federal government may rightfully
engage along this line.
Here is a concrete example of what Senator
Harding has in view as part of his constructive
program. Twelve million women ' engaged , in
the professions or industry, 'each a potential
mother, demand the active and unremitting in
terest of the government, not in a paternal way,
but that the security of our future may be made
certain by safeguarding its base, that of the
mothers of the nation. This is a program the
women can understand, they know the value of.
The sane, rational appeal of the republican
candidate to the common sense of the public is
having its effect. Whatever his vision of a
worJd without war may be, he is not pledging
himself to; any vagarious plan, but offers to do
those things which are helpful and which can
be accomplished for, the good of humanity.
Pledges that may be redeemed, not promises
to be forgotten or dreams to be exploded, are
his offer to the people. Americans can well af
ford to trust a leader like that; they can safely
follow no other. '
Softening Prices in Evidence.
The downward swoop of retail prices may
not be as precipitate as was the upward flight,
but it appears to have commenced. Advertise
ments that appear in the newspapers all indicate
this, while announcements from time to time in
the news columns of cuts made by factories in
the selling price of their products support the
belief that the peak really has been passed. . It
is not necessary to discuss the causes that have
led to this. Many are suggested, but all finally
lead to the same end. It will be some time, per
haps, before the full effect of the reductions
made by manufacturers is reflected at the retail
stores, but it is coming. Basic conditions are
undergoing the readjustment that has been in
evitable, and living will once more take on some
thing that has been sadly lacking since the un
settlement that followed when the pressure of
war was removed two years ago. As much
of danger lies in the new condition as was held
by that which was passing, and equal care must
be observed in order to avoid the mishaps that
follow injudicious action. With the exercise of
ordinary prudence, prices may be safely brought
down from the stilts on which they have moved
for many months, and set on a solid footing
once more. But we are not yet out of the woods.
What a Bird Can Do.
According to a legend, a cackling goose
saved Rome. The ravens fed the prophet when
he had. fled before the wrath of an unjust and
despotic monarch. The dove brought Noah
symbol that dry land hd reappeared. All
through history, sacred, profane, legendary or
authentic, we find incidents of some feathered
biped doing his featherless brother great service
in emergency. Now from Kansas comes a most
interesting tale of how a rooster saved the car
in which Governor Cox is making his campaign
journey from probable wreck. Pursuers of the
fowl found him perched on the truck of the, car.
and in order to dislodge him were compelled
to notice some defects that might easily have
resulted in disaster. The fowl was removed,
the damaged wheels replaced, and the journey
was resumed, both Cox and cock-sure of the
candidate's safety. As we noted the other day,
the candidate's tour is not devoid of the spice
of peril, aside from the hardship it entails, but
how lucky it was that rooster sought out the
place he did to. hide.
Omaha is a noisy place, all right, but the
Founds you hear are those of progress and not
e
of discontent.
"Hard Boiled" Smith says he did not Vant
clemency, but he took it.
Ttft end Hoover make a pretty good p"ir to
Here comes the foot ball warrior ',
A Line 0' Type or Two
Htm ta Ma Una, M tka aalat Ml akara Mur at.
I am the Sun
my doom
Is to burn
thoae I love
HtUe girl.
little girl
close ayour ayes
run away .
11
i"
for I want you
I am the Moon
little girl
shrieking silently
my loneliness
yearning terribly ,
for eoul
run away
- little girl
or I will steal your aouj
and loae it
, with mine , - l .
: ta .
I am the iters '
fixed high In the night
"tearleaalr winking
despair
I look for you
' little girl
with & myriad hopeless eyes
and I can't find you
anywhere
why did you run away
little girl
riquarius.
"IN what directions," inquires a reviewer of
a volume of native verse, "is American poetry
moving?" Why, chiefly from left to right; al
though a few of the modern school run to zig-
BASE BALL'S APHRODITE,
air: I notice the headline in an evening
paper. "Comiekey Bares All." Don't you think
he'a horribly unreticent? MARY JANE.
WE knew there was a catch somewhere. In
response to scores of requests for the name of
the place where he got that marvelous meal, W.
S. wires that it was Wichita, Kan.
' Ontdoor Theatricals.
(From the Wleconaln Rapida Tribune.)
Mr. and Mrs. Jonea state that their
daughter, Mrs. Irmegarde Morrlaan, was
unable to come back with them, a she is
Juat recovering from a severe attack of
pan torn lne poisoning.
"OWING to the constantly increasing cost
of operation and the unusual advances in linens
and other hotel supplies, all outside telephone
calls will be charged at the rate of five cents per
call." Portland Hotel Co.
Which vaguely recalls the barber who ad
vertised: "Owing to the high cost of supplies,
hair cutting will be 40 cents." .
MISPRINT FOR BIRTH MARK, PERHAPS.
(From the Burlington Gazette.)
The bride, wore a pretty gown of white
voil with a hat of white georgette, and car
ried a book mark.
NEW YORK'S Evening Post recently in
formed the world that George Russell for
merly wrote his pen name as a diphthong, but
dropped it for the separate letters "A. E." But
apparently the Post's proofroom does not read a
paper, as the poet's nom de plume always ap
pears rxr . -
TO PEGGY STUDYING HER HAJiD.
' Aged three months.
A tea-rose petal delicately pink,
The very sweetness of an English Spring,
Is Hot one-half so lovely. Dear. I think,
As the small hand you And so interesting.
With serious blue eyes, oblivious,
Tou watch and turn it slowly o'er and o'er,
Intent on your first problem ponderous
Of three dimensions first of many more.
And ao, methinks, the little Jesus, too,
Studied His new-made hand: but with less
calm
His Mother kissed It, knowing that for you
A cruel nail would pierce the tender palm.
G. V. B.
-"I HAVE been wanting to tell you some
thing for some time," said the fair ladye, "but,
you see, we had never been introduced." We
replied that that should not have deterred her.
We have been introduced to only a few of our
contributors, and we do not know the names of
some of the most intimate of them. "It was a
sign, wis it not?" said we . "Yes," she said. "It
was a sign for motorists, just before we came
to a church, and it said, 'Church. Slow During i
Service.' It usually is, isn't it?" she added
brightly.
ONE DAT OF F. J. IS PLENTY.
(From the Rocky Ford Tribune.)
' F. S. Cretcher arrived Wednesday from
Scott City, Kan., and will visit here for sev
eral days with his family.
Mrs. F. J. Cretcher and Mrs. J. A. John
son left Thursday afternoon for Monmouth.
111., where they will be the guests of ,
relatives for the next couple of months.
ONE. hundred and twelve police recruits
were graduated in New York last week. The
class motto was "Ad astra."
STICKING CLOSE.
Sir: All I waated to say was this, that as 1
went through the Calif, desert places on the
limited in August we passed Kelso, where the
thermometer was hitting 125 in the shade, and
there I noticed that H. Hots & Sons sold gen
eral merchandise. H. B. S.
A READER of a literary review wants to
know whether anybody can put him on the
track of a poem containing the lines,
"O God," she cried in accents wild.
"Take my life but spare my child!"
We once knew. And as we recall' the poem,
those two lines were the best in it.
FOR THE CONVENTIONAL.
, (From the Ncgaunee Iron Herald.)
The Negaunee Steam Bath Resort con
tinues to do a g-ood business. It is supplied
with public bathroom for men and women,
also private bathrooms.
AT the request of Dean Jet Wimp, of the
Immortals, we are admitting Miss Jetta Soppa
of Joy, 111., to the academic groves.
SHOW HIM IN.
Sir: The appointment of Julius Stem winder
of Broken Bow, Neb., to the chair of chronology
would, I believe, meet with the approval of all
right thinking people. T. T.
BEFORE dropping the subject, let it be
noted that Nick Carter of Reno, Ncv., is a can
didate for sheriff.
How to Keep Well
By DR. W. A EVANS
Qaaatloaa concerning -hrf taia, aanlta
tion and nravantiaa of dlaaaaa, sub
mittad to Dr. Evana by raadara at Tha
Baa, will ba aaawarad paraoaally, sub
joct to proper limitation, whar a
stamped, aaw-eeaed envelop ia ea
cloeed. Dr. Evana will not make
dlafBoala ar prescribe far individual
dieeaeea. Addreaa letters be earn at
Tha Baa.
Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Zvaat.
THE ENRAPTURED UND1E MAN.
(Fro mthe El Dorado, Kan., Times.)
Now that the gold and brown of the big
prairies proclaim the world Is being hushed
by the solemn sweetness of the passing sum
mer, you should remember that Harry
Logan has his store well tilled with the
best there is in good warm underwear.
FIRST call for brown October near-ale.
B. L. T.
PERILS OP ANTHRAX.
In the last 13 years 190 cases of
human anthrax were reported from
Massachusetts alone. More than
one-fourth of these were reported in
1917, the year when the leather,
hide and hair trade was most upset
by the war. One hundred and forty
five of these were reported after
the outbreak of the world war. Some
of them were the result of the use
of Infected shaving brushes.
Anthrax is not only a serious dls
ease, menacing domestic animals as
well as man, . but onoe It gets a foot
hold in a county or state It Is elimi
nated with the greatest difficulty.
Pastures infected by anthrax are un
safe to use for 20 years or more.
The reason for the great increase
in anthrax after the onset of the
world war was the coming into trade
of hides and hair from far inland,
hitherto undrawn on sections of the
almost uncivilized world. Almost
nine-tenths of the cases were caused
by Asiatic hides and hair. In 1917
a new low priced shaving brush was
put on the market and the shaving
brush cases began.
To prevent the importation of an
thrax, all hide3, hair and wool
should be sterilized. In an article
on anthrax in Massachusetts appear
ing in the American Journal of Pub
lic Health, Dr. S. H. Osborn says
the Schattenfroh method of steriliz
ing hides is satisfactory to the tan
ners, the trade generally and the
health authorities.
It consists of soaking the hides
for 40 hours, at a temperature of 60
to 70 degrees Fahrenheit, in a solu
tion of 10 per cent sodium chloride
and 2 per cent absolute hydro
chloric acid in water. Dr. Slack
showed that various combinations of
strengths of salt, 5 to 10 per cent,
and hydrochloric acid, 34 Per cent
to 2 per cent, killed anthrax spores,
but that it was necessary to assay
the hydrochloric acid used and know
its exact strength.
To disinfect the hair, the bundles
should be loosened and steam run in.
A temperature of 230 degrees Faren-
helt maintained for half an hour in
all parts of. the bundle of hair will
kill all spores. Spores in shaving
brushes can be killed by prolonged
exposure to steam or to formalin.
Just a word as to the treatment
of anthrax. It is not necessarily a
fatal disease. In fact about four-
fifths of the cases get well Lancing
and cutting out the anthrax carbun
cles should not be done. It in
creases the chancc'of death materially.
Cootie Clings Like Bulldog.
E. R.1 W. writes: "Can you suggest
a treatment to overcome 'nits'?"
REPLY. -Vinegar
will loosen them from the
hairs. They can then be combed
away with a fine tooth comb. If the
hair is greased with vaseline, any
nits left behind will not hatch. When
there is difficulty In getting rid of
nits" it is altogether ' probable . that
lice supply a new lot when the old
lot has been removed, tms may
le due to continued contact with in
different people. Body lice stay -in
the clothes rather than on the body.
Therefore, unless the clothing is
cleaned of them when the body is, a
hew crop of nits will appear.
Swimming Is O. K.
Mrs. E. W. writes; "1. Can a
mother of a 12-weeks-old breast fed
baby go in bathing without any
harmful results?
"2. How soon after birth of a
baby should a nursing mother's
menstruation resume ?"
REPLY
1. Yes.
2. Most mothers do not menstru
ate until they wean their babies.
There is a good physiologic basis for
this. However, a woman need not
be disturbed if her menstruation
starts earlier. i
. i
Tears Laurels From Burbank.
Omaha, Sept. 18, 1S20. To the
Editor of The Bee: In several re
cent editorials you couple the name
of Luther Burbank with that of
Ford and Edison and endoavor ito
convey the impression that they be
long in the same claaa. Our dally use
of their devices will readily lead us
to award the two latter the distinc
tion of being the greatest of living
inventors, but pray name one single
thing that Burbank has ever prop
agated that has ever proved to be
of any substantial use or benefit to
any one. The nearest approach he
ever came to this was the propaga
tion of the Burbank potato a fairly
decent spud though not a first
class one and It never came into
general use. Our commercial seeds
nton have propagated many better
ones which I could name and they
lay no claim to being classed as
scientists. Burbank's "wonderberry"
was prolific but unpalatable and
useless and no one ever grew it a
second time. His "pitless plum" had
no merit and never came into gen
eral use. His "spineless cactus,"
about which he shouted the loudest,
proved absolutely worthless and was
condemned by the United States De
partment of Agriculture in a special
bulletin Issued for that purpose to
protect the public from fraud. In
fact, after a careful search, I am
unable to find a single useful tree,
fruit, herb or vegetable to his
credit '
Could. Burbank lay claim to being
the propagator of the navel orange,
the loganberry or some of those
grains which the Agricultural de
partment has discovered as being
especially adapted to our semi-arid
regions, then he' might well be
classed with Edison and Ford. '
But Burbank, having repeafedly
attempted by extensive advertising
to foist his worthless productions on
the public at fancy figures, I know
of no reason why he should not be
debarred from the use of the malls
and classed where he belongs.
READER.
Going Too Far.
An Alabama mob lynched a man
for making Insulting remarks to a
woman. But this does seem like
stretching chivalry as well as necks.
Baltimore American.
Add to the Scenery.
The politicians would like to
know what our "first, fair and fear
less" voters are going to do this fall.
Columbus Dispatch.
Nobody Else Doca.
Only trouble with the Volstead
net is that the revenue department
takes it seriously. Brooklyn Eagle.
Phone
Walnut 300
And Order Your Winter
Supply of
COAL
UPDIKE LUMBER
& COAL CO.
Phone Walnut 300
American State Bank
Capital, $200,000.00.
Farnam at 18th.
October 1st we pay our regular 1 compounded
quarterly interest on your Saving Account. .
You are invited to test its convenience.
1 compounded quarterly interest added to your
account -Subject to withdrawal without notice.
bepositfl made on or before the 10th day of any
month considered as having been made on the first
day. -
Vour checking account Invited. This bank does more
for you than carry your account. We have the facili
ties you would specify for the handling of your bank
ing business. We invite your account on the basis
service. . - v .
D. W. CEISELMAN, Praeident. H. M. KROCH, Asst. Cashier.
D. C. CEISELMAN, Cashier. '
Deposits ia this Bank ara protected by tha Depositors' Guar
anty Fund of tha State of Nebraska.
aaarfl
JUl 1
Japan's Naval Strength.
We are not among those who believe that
the growth ofthe Japanese fleet represents any
threat to our naval supremacy in the Pacific.
When the superdreadnaughts that Japan lias
ouilt or now has on the ways, or, has proposed
lor construction, have been completed, she will
have in drcadnaughts .of the first class only a lit
tle over one-half the supcrdreadnaught strength
of the American fleet when the three-year pro
gram of 4916 has been built. At present she has
tour of this class and has under construction
tour others, so that when all are completed she
will have a total supcrdreadnaught tonnage of
J3U,UUU. tveil ll our supciuictuuuK i .jj
equally divided between the Atlantic and thin
Pacific, we wouia still nave a great cis m
strength in the Pacific over this Japanese fleet.
From the Scientific American.
Further Grave Peril Ahead.
.When suits of, paper clothes come !sito vogue
! the constitutional cigaret smoker who is in the
Ulmbit of scratching matches on the basement of
' his pant3 isill have to be careful not to set him
4 self afirc.-.rcY Orleans Stales.
X T
'Vex seem tole quite
Ia devotee or the
Tvf- vh T-
piano" 5 aid. & friend.
to a giffed musiciaxv.
Chopin's sub'
lime music is superior
to ragtime," He replied
so the matchless
Andirons
They support the logs in ,
your open wood fire and
make fire building easy.
As fine articles of furni
ture they decorate your
hearth and double ' the
charm of your fire. .
They are beautiful, dur
able and practical; desir
able in every home where
there is a fireplace.
We offer manyizes, ma
terials and patterns at
prices to suit your purse.
Sunclerland Brothers Co.
Entire Third Floor, Keclinc Building, 17th and Harney Street
excels every other piano.
I put into my music
It is impossible or me
to play eacpressively or
reelinglv on any other
piano. cTrulyifciS'
as others claim-the
worlds inest piano,
bar none."
There are eleven other
Notable Pianos .
in our stock to select from.
Over 100 Pianos and Play
ers on our floors, all priced
in plein figures at the cash
prices, or if desired on pay
ments. Piano3 Irom $365
and up. Players from $595
and better.
1513 Douglas St.
The Art and Music Store
Rcicmbcr Carjzo' Concert
Od. 12th
"BLITZEN"
IS A SPECIAL
GASOLENE
"business is coop thank you"
. Blitzen Gasolene has explosive force
not heat units. It is a special gasolene
and explodes uniformly and completely.
It gives POWER. It is the highest grade
of the 'two gasolenes we sell and gives
its RESULTS in miles.
Two GOOD Gasolenes:
BLITZEN (Export Test) ... 32
VULCAN (Dry Test) . 29c
L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO.
Locomotive ,
and - Auto Oils. . -
Keynoil j
"The Best Oils We Know."
Our Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours
Pratidant
J
A
r
I anV